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The Isleys Live is a live album released by The Isley Brothers on March 24, 1973 on T-Neck Records as a double album with the catalog number TNS 3010-2. [3] Recorded at the Bitter End in New York City, the band are introduced as T-Neck recording artists before they take the stage.
The Isley Brothers' final album under their six-member lineup, Between the Sheets (1983), sold more than two million copies. By then, financial struggles, creative difficulties, and other issues affected the group. Shortly after the success of Between the Sheets, Ernie, Marvin, and Chris left the Isley Brothers and formed Isley-Jasper-Isley.
Live at Yankee Stadium is a 1969 live album by The Isley Brothers, released on their own T-Neck label. While the Isleys appear in this live album, it is actually a live showcase by the group to conjoin artists that signed to their T-Neck label and Buddah Records-associated acts including Judy White, the girl group Sweet Cherries, the gospel group The Edwin Hawkins Singers and the family soul ...
The younger Isleys split off as Isley-Jasper-Isley in the 1980s, but the brothers continued to record together, scoring new songs on the Hot 100 in six different decades. O’Kelly died in 1986 ...
Ernie, Marvin, and Chris left to form Isley-Jasper-Isley, while Rudolph, Ronald and O'Kelly carried on as the Isley Brothers, releasing "Masterpiece" on Warner Bros. in 1985.
Live It Up is the twelfth album by the Isley Brothers, released on September 7, 1974. It was their second major-distributed album with Epic Records under their T-Neck subsidiary. The album was remastered and expanded for inclusion in the 2015 released CD box set The RCA Victor & T-Neck Album Masters, 1959–1983 .
In 1967, the Isley Brothers recorded the song. Their version released in March 1968 and reached number 121 in the U.S. [7] and 22 on the R&B chart. The American jazz-rock band Blood, Sweat & Tears released a version of the song on the album BST4 in June 1971.
In 1964, the record label rereleased and renamed Twist & Shout as Take Some Time Out for The Famous Isley Brothers, due to the popularity of the Beatles' rendition of "Twist & Shout". The album cover of Take Some Time Out for The Famous Isley Brothers is a picture of the trio performing in a night club.